Bodies of men who died in Italy return

The families of Bahamian diplomat Alrae Ramsey, 28, and Blair John, 29, began to scream at the sight of the British Airways 253 aircraft on the tarmac at Lynden Pindling International Airport.

“Lord, no,” one relative shrieked.

It was the final flight of the two men who reportedly drowned in Turin, Italy, earlier this month.

Authorities said the airline denied a request for the families to receive the coffins on the tarmac, so their first glimpse of Ramsey’s and John’s remains came nearly an hour later at 4:26 p.m. in a sun-baked warehouse parking lot.

Some wiped away tears at the site as a forklift carrying the coffins slowly navigated through the crowd.

Mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles and cousins began to holler as the forklift came to a halt.

Anita Ramsey, the mother of Alrae Ramsey, was seen with her arms stretched across her son’s dark colored coffin which was covered in a black nylon material.

“Oh, my baby, I love you,” she repeated tearfully.

After a mere five minutes, Ramsey was guided away from the luggage carrier, which contained her son’s coffin, to make way for employees from a funeral home.